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CHAPTER XI
TRISTRAM AND ISOUDE
AFTER this affair Tristram was banished from the
kingdom, and Isoude shut up in a tower which stood on the
bank of a river. Tristram could not resolve to depart
without some further communication with his beloved; so he
concealed himself in the forest, till at last he contrived
to attract her attention by means of twigs which he
curiously peeled and sent down the stream under her
window. By this means many secret interviews were
obtained. Tristram dwelt in the forest, sustaining himself
by game, which the dog Houdain ran down for him; for this
faithful animal was unequalled in the chase, and knew so
well his master's wish for concealment that in the pursuit
of his game he never barked. At length Tristram departed,
but left Houdain with Isoude, as a remembrancer of him.
Sir Tristram wandered through various countries,
achieving the most perilous enterprises, and covering
himself with glory, yet unhappy at the separation from his
beloved Isoude. At length King Mark's territory was
invaded by a neighboring chieftain, and he was forced to
summon his nephew to his aid. Tristram obeyed the call,
put himself at the head of his uncle's vassals, and drove
the enemy out of the country. Mark was full of gratitude,
and Tristram, restored to favor and to the society of his
beloved Isoude, seemed at the summit of happiness. But a
sad reverse was at hand.
Tristram had brought with him a friend named Pheredin,
son of the king of Brittany. This young knight saw Queen
Isoude, and could not resist her charms. Knowing the love
of his friend for the queen, and that that love was
returned, Pheredin concealed his own, until his health
failed, and he feared he was drawing near his end. He then
wrote to the beautiful queen that he was dying for love of
her.
The gentle Isoude, in a moment of pity for the friend
of Tristram, returned him an answer so kind and
compassionate that it restored him to life. A few days
afterward Tristram found this letter. The most terrible
jealousy took possession of his soul; he would have slain
Pheredin, who with difficulty made his escape. Then
Tristram mounted his horse, and rode to the forest, where
for ten days he took no rest nor food. At length he was
found by a damsel lying almost dead by the brink of a
fountain. She recognized him, and tried in vain to rouse
his attention. At last, recollecting his love for music,
she went and got her harp, and played thereon. Tristram
was roused from his reverie; tears flowed; he breathed
more freely; he took the harp from the maiden, and sung
this lay, with a voice broken with sobs:-
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"Sweet I sang in former days,
Kind love perfected my lays:
Now my art alone displays
The woe that on my being preys.
"Charming love, delicious power,
Worshipped from my earliest hour,
Thou who life on all dost shower,
Love! my life thou dost devour.
"In death's hour I beg of thee,
Isoude, dearest enemy,
Thou who erst couldst kinder be,
When I'm gone, forget not me.
"On my gravestone passers by
Oft will read, as low I lie,
'Never wight in love could vie
With Tristram, yet she let him die.'"
Tristram, having finished his lay, wrote it off and
gave it to the damsel, conjuring her to present it to the
queen.
Meanwhile Queen Isoude was inconsolable at the absence
of Tristram. She discovered that it was caused by the
fatal letter which she had written to Pheredin. Innocent,
but in despair at the sad effects of her letter, she wrote
another to Pheredin, charging him never to see her again.
The unhappy lover obeyed this cruel decree. He plunged
into the forest, and died of grief and love in a hermit's
cell.
Isoude passed her days in lamenting the absence and
unknown fate of Tristram. One day her jealous husband,
having entered her chamber unperceived, overheard her,
singing the following lay:-
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"My voice to piteous wail is bent,
My harp to notes of languishment;
Ah, love! delightsome days be meant
For happier wights, with hearts content.
"Ah, Tristram! far away from me,
Art thou from restless anguish free?
Ah! couldst thou so one moment be,
From her who so much loveth thee?"
The king, hearing these words, burst forth in a rage;
but Isoude was too wretched to fear his violence.
"You have heard me," she said; "I confess
it all. I love Tristram, and always shall love him.
Without doubt he is dead, and died for me. I no longer
wish to live. The blow that shall finish my misery will be
most welcome."
The king was moved at the distress of the fair Isoude,
and perhaps the idea of Tristram's death tended to allay
his wrath. He left the queen in charge of her women,
commanding them to take especial care lest her despair
should lead her to do harm to herself.
Tristram, meanwhile, distracted as he was, rendered a
most important service to the shepherds by slaying a
gigantic robber named Taullas, who was in the habit of
plundering their flocks and rifling their cottages. The
shepherds, in their gratitude to Tristram, bore him in
triumph to King Mark to have him bestow on him a suitable
reward. No wonder Mark failed to recognize in the
half-clad wild man before him his nephew Tristram; but
grateful for the service the unknown had rendered, he
ordered him to be well taken care of, and gave him in
charge to the queen and her women. Under such care
Tristram rapidly recovered his serenity and his health, so
that the romancer tells us he became handsomer than ever.
King Mark's jealousy revived with Tristram's health and
good looks, and, in spite of his debt of gratitude so
lately increased, he again banished him from the court.
Sir Tristram left Cornwall, and proceeded into the land
of Loegria (England) in quest of adventures. One day he
entered a wide forest. The sound of a little bell showed
him that some inhabitant was near. He followed the sound,
and found a hermit, who informed him that he was in the
forest of Arnantes, belonging to the fairy Viviane, the
Lady of the Lake, who, smitten with love for King Arthur,
had found means to entice him to this forest, where by
enchantments she held him a prisoner, having deprived him
of all memory of who and what he was. The hermit informed
him that all the knights of the Round Table were out in
search of the king, and that he (Tristram) was now in the
scene of the most grand and important adventures.
This was enough to animate Tristram in the search. He
had not wandered far before he encountered a knight of
Arthur's court, who proved to be Sir Kay the seneschal,
who demanded of him whence he came. Tristram answering,
"From Cornwall," Sir Kay did not let slip the
opportunity of a joke at the expense of the Cornish
knight. Tristram chose to leave him in his error, and even
confirmed him in it; for meeting some other knights,
Tristram declined to joust with them. They spent the night
together at an abbey, where Tristram submitted patiently
to all their jokes. The seneschal gave the word to his
companions that they should set out early next day, and
intercept the Cornish knight on his way, and enjoy the
amusement of seeing his fright when they should insist on
running a tilt with him. Tristram next morning found
himself alone; he put on his armor, and set out to
continue his quest. He soon saw before him the seneschal
and the three knights, who barred the way, and insisted on
a joust. Tristram excused himself a long time; at last he
reluctantly took his stand. He encountered them, one after
the other, and overthrew them all four, man and horse, and
then rode off, bidding them not to forget their friend,
the knight of Cornwall.
Tristram had not ridden far when he met a damsel, who
cried out, "Ah, my lord! hasten forward, and prevent
a horrid treason!" Tristram flew to her assistance,
and soon reached a spot where he beheld a knight, whom
three others had borne to the ground, and were unlacing
his helmet in order to cut off his head.
Tristram flew to the rescue, and slew with one stroke
of his lance one of the assailants. The knight, recovering
his feet, sacrificed another to his vengeance, and the
third made his escape. The rescued knight then raised the
visor of his helmet, and a long white beard fell down upon
his breast. The majesty and venerable air of this knight
made Tristram suspect that it was none other than Arthur
himself, and the prince confirmed his conjecture. Tristram
would have knelt before him, but Arthur received him in
his arms, and inquired his name and country; but Tristram
declined to disclose them, on the plea that he was now on
a quest requiring secrecy. At this moment the damsel who
had brought Tristram to the rescue darted forward, and,
seizing the king's hand, drew from his finger a ring, the
gift of the fairy, and by that act dissolved the
enchantment. Arthur, having recovered his reason and his
memory, offered to Tristram to attach him to his court,
and to confer honors and dignities upon him; but Tristram
declined all, and only consented to accompany him till he
should see him safe in the hands of his knights. Soon
after, Hector de Marys rode up, and saluted the king, who
on his part introduced him to Tristram as one of the
bravest of his knights. Tristram took leave of the king
and his faithful follower, and continued his quest.
We cannot follow Tristram through all the adventures
which filled this epoch of his history. Suffice it to say,
he fulfilled on all occasions the duty of a true knight,
rescuing the oppressed, redressing wrongs, abolishing evil
customs, and suppressing injustice, thus by constant
action endeavoring to lighten the pains of absence from
her he loved. In the meantime Isoude, separated from her
dear Tristram, passed her days in languor and regret. At
length she could no longer resist the desire to hear some
news of her lover. She wrote a letter, and sent it by one
of her damsels, niece of her faithful Brengwain. One day
Tristram, weary with his exertions, had dismounted and
laid himself down by the side of a fountain and fallen
asleep. The damsel of Queen Isoude arrived at the same
fountain, and recognized Passebreul, the horse of
Tristram, and presently perceived his master, asleep. He
was thin and pale, showing evident marks of the pain he
suffered in separation from his beloved. She awaked him,
and gave him the letter which she bore, and Tristram
enjoyed the pleasure, so sweet to a lover, of hearing from
and talking about the object of his affections. He prayed
the damsel postpone her return till after the magnificent
tournament which Arthur had proclaimed should have taken
place, and conducted her to the castle of Persides, a
brave and loyal knight, who received her with great
consideration.
Tristram conducted the damsel of Queen Isoude to the
tournament and had her placed in the balcony among the
ladies of the queen. He then joined the tourney. Nothing
could exceed his strength and valor. Launcelot admired
him, and by a secret presentiment declined to dispute the
honor of the day with a knight so gallant and so skilful.
Arthur descended from the balcony to greet the conqueror;
but the modest and devoted Tristram, content with having
borne off the prize in the sight of the messenger of
Isoude, made his escape with her, and disappeared.
The next day the tourney recommenced. Tristram assumed
different armor, that he might not be known; but he was
soon detected by the terrible blows that he gave. Arthur
and Guenever had no doubt that it was the same knight who
had borne off the prize of the day before. Arthur's
gallant spirit was roused. After Launcelot of the Lake and
Sir Gawain, he was accounted the best knight of the Round
Table. He went privately and armed himself, and came into
the tourney in undistinguished armor. He ran a joust with
Tristram, whom he shook in his seat; but Tristram, who did
not know him, threw him out of the saddle. Arthur
recovered himself and, content with having made proof of
the stranger knight, bade Launcelot finish the adventure,
and vindicate the honor of the Round Table. Sir Launcelot,
at the bidding of the monarch, assailed Tristram, whose
lance was already broken in former encounters. But the law
of this sort of combat was, that the knight, after having
broken his lance, must fight with his sword, and must not
refuse to meet with his shield the lance of his
antagonist. Tristram met Launcelot's charge upon his
shield, which that terrible lance could not fail to
pierce. It inflicted a wound upon Tristram's side, and
breaking, left the iron in the wound. But Tristram also
with his sword smote so vigorously on Launcelot's casque
that he cleft it, and wounded his head. The wound was not
deep, but the blood flowed into his eyes, and blinded him
for a moment, and Tristram, who thought himself mortally
wounded, retired from the field. Launcelot declared to the
king that he had never received such a blow in his life
before.
Tristram hastened to Gouvernail, his squire, who drew
forth the iron, bound up the wound, and gave him immediate
ease. Tristram, after the tournament, kept retired in his
tent, but Arthur, with the consent of the knights of the
Round Table, decreed him the honors of the second day. But
it was no longer a secret that the victor of the two days
was the same individual, and Gouvernail, being questioned,
confirmed the suspicions of Launcelot and Arthur, that it
was no other than Sir Tristram of Lyonesse, the nephew of
the king of Cornwall.
King Arthur, who desired to reward his distinguished
valor, and knew that his uncle Mark had ungratefully
banished him, would have eagerly availed himself of the
opportunity to attach Tristram to his court,- all the
knights of the Round Table declaring with acclamation that
it would be impossible to find a more worthy companion.
But Tristram had already departed in search of adventures,
and the damsel of Queen Isoude returned to her mistress.
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